Public sector IT & e-Government news, job vacancies, public sector tenders from PublicTechnology.net
Advertise on our sites  |  About us  |  Contact us RSS news feeds
Free news email alerts from Publictechnology.net: Sign up here
Feb 09, 2010 - 03:22 PM
Join & login to submit articles
Want to join?  or  Login
Education
DfES e-Learning strategy: Ruth Kelly comments


 Tag:  Education    Print article: Printer friendly page    Email article: Send this story to a friend       This was published: 16 Mar 2005 - 06:30 am   

The DfES e-Learning strategy launched yesterday is one of the first large scale IT-driven proposals to be unveiled by Secretary of State Ruth Kelly since she took office.

In her forward to the report, Harnessing Technology: Transforming Learning and Children's Services, this is what she says:

"Our plans for boosting performance and standards across education are far reaching and radical. We aim to put learners, young people - and their parents - in the driving seat, shaping the opportunities open to all learners to fit around their particular needs and preferences."

"In achieving these goals the effective use of interactive technologies is absolutely crucial and I am determined that we grasp them. They offer huge opportunities that we must exploit. That means working with all the stakeholders, schools, colleges, adult and community learning organisations, universities, independent training providers, and the Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) industry, to ensure that we deliver quality and cost effective services to all. We want to extend the variety of places where people can learn. "

"I am particularly excited by the idea of giving every student and learner a personal online learning space where they can store their own course materials and assignments in digital form, and record their achievements. Over time we should see the technology join up better so that this is available to learners to build on wherever they go - to further learning, or to work-based learning. And in the future it will be more than simply a storage place - a digital space that is personalised, that remembers what the learner is interested in and suggests relevant web sites, or alerts them to courses and learning opportunities that fit their needs. "

"Online information services open up real possibilities of keeping parents much more engaged with what their children are doing, and able to have a dialogue with the school on how they are progressing. For teachers, lecturers and tutors it means easy and efficient ways of keeping in touch, giving feedback on students' progress, and managing marking and assessment. Unifying our approach to technology means they will be able to collaborate more easily with colleagues in other institutions and offer wider curriculum choice. With more flexible e-learning resources available online, teachers can adapt the curriculum to their learners' needs and interests. Technology is the key to personalised learning."

"And imaginative use of ICT should help engage more learners in the excitement of learning. Borrowing ideas from the world of interactive games, we can motivate even reluctant learners to practice complex skills and achieve much more than they would through traditional means. New technologies can attract new kids of learners into lifelong learning. Wider access to these more compelling learning experiences will contribute to the ambitions of our Skills Strategy to offer employers better support for skills and training."

"Of course as we go forward in these areas we must make sure that everyone has access to this technology. We are working together with industry to ensure an equitable solution to the potential digital divide. As we continue to embed e-learning across the whole learning process, it will blend more easily with life and work, bridging the boundaries between formal and informal learning. We have proposed an education system for 14-19 which is tailored to the needs of young people, and offers more flexible learning opportunities. Technology can be mobile. That means e-learning can come to the learner. And as demand increases, it becomes more attractive for the digital technology industry to invest in providing access. It is our goal to work towards ICT as a universal utility, creating more flexible learning opportunities for everyone."

"I am also excited by the possibilities of new digital technologies to help us develop more tailored and personalised children's services. We know that agencies supporting children and families will offer better support when social workers, teachers and professional practitioners can share information about vulnerable children. We are working to help local agencies and public services join together as digital communities, creating a more supportive and personalised environment for their citizens."

"I want to work with all our partners, with education institutions, with the children's and education workforce, and with the ICT industry, with everyone playing their part. Government has to set the direction and encourage the approach, but we cannot do it alone. This strategy should help put us decisively on this road to achieve our ambition for a world in which parents and carers engage more effectively with their child's learning, professionals supporting young people and families more easily coordinate their work, and adult learners of all ages find learning more fun, more challenging and more productive."


Related links to this article:
Harnessing Technology: Transforming Learning and Children's Services - is at this link

DfES




e-Government National Awards 2004: Winners were announced on 19th January
The e-Government National Awards (www.e-GovernmentAwards.org.uk) recognise and praise the best strategies, achievements, teams and individuals in UK e-Government. The guest of honour at the 2004 Awards dinner was Ian Watmore, head of e-Government at the Cabinet Office e-Government Unit.

Full details on winners can be found at this link.

A gallery of photos of Awards winners and the dinner can be found at this link.

Organiser for the awards was PublicTechnology.net, the leading online news provider for those in UK e-Government and public sector IT, with 29,300+ readers per month. The Awards were supported by the Cabinet Office e-Government Unit and Socitm. Platinum sponsor was Intel and also a sponsor was Jobsgopublic.


Posted by: Editor 



Other latest articles on the subject of Education

· Bolton Council deploys media filter to deliver YouTube content   (2 Feb 2010 )
· Budget cuts worry ICT education decision makers   (29 Jan 2010 )
· Sharing Innovative Practices in University Modernisation   (14 Jan 2010 )
· Becta committed to erasing the digital divide with e-Learning Foundation   (13 Jan 2010 )
· Technology shortfall limiting technology in schools   (13 Jan 2010 )
· Minister: Private/public partnerships vital to educational success   (13 Jan 2010 )
· Vision2learn for schools develops new Functional Skills courses for 2010   (12 Jan 2010 )
· E-Skills Big Ambition working   (8 Jan 2010 )
· University of Aberdeen upgrades to ITSM   (6 Jan 2010 )
· Doing HR with technology   (29 Dec 2009 )

>>>More articles on Education>>>

L A T E S T   J O B S

My TechTenders.net Account:

• My Website login
• My Subscription login
• Subscribe to TechTenders.net


My PublicTechnology.net contributer Account:

• PublicTechnology.net Account
• PublicTechnology Emails
About:

• About us
• Contact us
• Terms & conditions of use
• Privacy policy
• RSS feeds: Publictechnology

Copyright:

Copyright Public Technology Ltd 2003-2009. Crown copyright material used under click use licence C02W0007583. Parliamentary material used under click use licence P2005000039, & reproduced with the permission of the Controller of HMSO on behalf of Parliament. EU tender information published under license from the European Commission.

This web site automatically and continually monitors, collects and publishes latest breakings news from a large number of sources. Copyright of content / material may belong to the original source.
Advertise to our audiences:

• Advertising options
• Directory listings
• Advertise Jobs
• Advertise Tenders
• Promote Events
• Sponsor the Awards
• Publish press releases
• Promote products or services
The Public Technology
digital information network:


Public Technology is the UK's foremost news & information provider for the public sector & its suppliers.

It comprises:
• Techtenders.net
• PublicTechnology.net
• Jobs.PublicTechnology.net
• Public Technology email alerts
• PublicPolitics.net
• PublicPages.net
• WhitehallPages.net
• EducationPages.net
• EUmonitor.net
• PublicTenders.net
• NHStenders.net
• e-Government National Awards